Alright so I figured out what I'm doing, and now I ask you if this is unique or "sci-fiy" enough to warrant entry for the contest.

So simply put, it is a group of six androids with shape-shifting capabilities that will go around separately looking for people that have "violated intergalactic law" and used a transport ray in their mouth to teleport the subject thousands of light-years from Earth. Also the androids don't interact with each other in any way, shape, or form

So is it too stupid? A rip-off of something else? If there is any way to build upon this, I would be glad to hear it.

First impressions: It sounds like a basic Doctor Who monster of the week to me. Though that's not necessarily a bad thing, it would need a lot of work to actually be presentable.

There are also a number of questions that you'd have to address for this to make sense:

How do we know the victims are teleported thousands of light years away? It's not like you can just point a telescope in their general direction and find them. And, if they were sent with some sort of radio beacon, it would be too weak to detect and, as the distance implies, we wouldn't even notice it until thousands of years later.

Are the victims really intergalactic criminals or are they just random schmoes who the androids just targeted for no good reason? Because you never specified it in your description. And, depending on which answer is right, or if it's a different one entirely, your SCiP would go in completely different directions.

How will the Foundation deal with your androids? Are they just trying to contain the robots or are they investigating the targets themselves to figure out what the hell is going on?

Again, those are my first impressions. A throw-away Doctor Who villain with a lot of unanswered questions. But, depending on how those questions are answered, this may either sink or float.

It was sort of a rough idea. I get your concerns especially the one about being a Doctor Who throw-away (I don't watch the show, so I wouldn't know). Now thinking about it, I have some things that I can add to.

How do we know the victims are teleported thousands of light years away? It's not like you can just point a telescope in their general direction and find them. And, if they were sent with some sort of radio beacon, it would be too weak to detect and, as the distance implies, we wouldn't even notice it until thousands of years later.

Maybe thousands of light years away was a bad term. The general point is that they zap you to a prison type ship (SCP-2000-B) that is a fair distance from Earth. Close enough to get an okay-ish signal, but far enough that it cannot be casually observed.

Are the victims really intergalactic criminals or are they just random schmoes who the androids just targeted for no good reason? Because you never specified it in your description. And, depending on which answer is right, or if it's a different one entirely, your SCiP would go in completely different directions.

Mainly, what the androids are looking for are people who had participated in or supported any sort of cruelty. Just or unjust. So in other words, D-Class and the like.

How will the Foundation deal with your androids? Are they just trying to contain the robots or are they investigating the targets themselves to figure out what the hell is going on?

They would contain the androids, but they would occasionally test with various D-Class to see what exactly the androids define "cruelty." and possibly learn more about the ship itself. Though I would need to do something to make that it's not just a "throw D-Class at it until it stops" scenario.

That said, I don't know how it'll shape up either. The best thing that I can do right now is write it and see what sticks.

Something I'd like to add: it might be a better idea if you gave the androids separate personalities/ goals, say one could be programmed to be harsh, one could be forgiving, one could have certain people, like children, it would never kill, one could want to negotiate with the race the planet was abducted from, one could try and be secretive. As it stands, having six of them is just pointless.

Also the androids don't interact with each other in any way, shape, or form

Why? Wouldn't six robots fighting intergalactic crime be better than them all working separately?